After Tokyo submitted
their bid for the
2020 Summer Olympics, there was talk of possibly renovating or reconstructing the National Olympic Stadium. The stadium would host the opening and closing ceremonies as well as track and field events. In February 2012, it was confirmed that the stadium would be demolished and reconstructed, and receive a £1 billion upgrade. In November 2012, renderings of the new national stadium were revealed, based on a design by British architect
Zaha Hadid (who had designed the
London Aquatics Centre for the
2012 Summer Olympics). The stadium was demolished in 2015 and the new one was originally scheduled to be completed in March 2019. The new stadium was to be the venue for
athletics,
rugby, some
football games, and the opening and closing ceremonies of the Olympics and Paralympics. The Japanese government announced several changes to Hadid's design in May 2015, citing budget constraints, including cancelling plans to build a
retractable roof and converting some permanent seating to temporary seating. The site area was also reduced from to . Several prominent Japanese architects, including
Toyo Ito and
Fumihiko Maki, criticized Hadid's design, with Ito comparing it to a turtle and Maki calling it a
white elephant; others criticized the stadium's encroachment on the outer gardens of the
Meiji Shrine.
Arata Isozaki, on the other hand, commented that he was "shocked to see that the dynamism present in the original had gone" in the redesign of Hadid's original plan. The roof of the new stadium was particularly problematic from an engineering perspective, as it required the construction of two steel arches long. Even after design changes, the stadium was estimated to cost over 300 billion yen, more than three times the cost of the
London Olympic Stadium and more than five times the cost of the
Beijing Olympic Stadium. The Japanese government reached an agreement in June 2015 with
Taisei Corporation and
Takenaka Corporation to complete the stadium for a total cost of around 250 billion yen. The new plan maintained the steel arch design while reducing the permanent capacity of the stadium to 65,000 in track mode with an additional 15,000 simple temporary seats available, allowing for an 80,000 capacity for football and the
2019 Rugby World Cup. However, on 17 July 2015,
Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe announced that plans to build the new National Stadium would be scrapped and rebid upon amid public discontent over the stadium's building costs. As a result, Abe said that a replacement venue would have to be selected for the Rugby World Cup, as the new stadium would not be ready until the 2020 Olympics. In August 2015, the Japanese government released new standards for the National Stadium's reconstruction. The fixed capacity would be 68,000 and be expandable to 80,000 through the use of temporary seats over the athletics track. The government also abandoned the retractable roof; instead a permanent roof was to be constructed over the spectator seating only. A sports museum and sky walkway that were part of the scrapped design were also eliminated, while VIP lounges and seats were reduced, along with reduced underground parking facilities. These reductions result in a site of 198,500 square meters, 13% less than originally planned. To further reduce costs, air conditioning for the stadium was abandoned upon request of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe. Together with the fact that the roof was constructed over the spectator seating only, this led to concerns over indoor temperatures. When asked about the abandonment, Minister for the Olympics
Toshiaki Endo stated that, "Air conditioners are installed in only two stadiums around the world, and they can only cool temperatures by 2 or 3°C". The government slated a decision on contractors and a design by December 2015, with construction to begin at its latest in December 2016. As of 18 September 2015, two contractors submitted bids for the process: the
Taisei Corporation working with architect
Kengo Kuma, and a consortium of several major Japanese contractors including the Takenaka, Shimizu, and Obayashi corporations working with architect
Toyo Ito. Former winning architect
Zaha Hadid was unable to find a (Japanese) contractor willing to work with her design, and was therefore forced to abandon efforts to resubmit her revised design in the new competition. On 21 December 2015, the Japan Sport Council announced that Kuma and the Taisei Corporation had been selected to design and construct the National Olympic Stadium. The stadium began construction in December 2016, and was set to conclude on 30 November 2019 when the stadium would be handed over to the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) for necessary games and ceremony preparations, including test events. The new design would hold 68,089 in athletics mode with the ability to construct temporary seating over the permanent track to create an increased capacity of 80,016. Capacity during the Olympic Games was originally planned to be 60,102 taking into account press and executive seating areas, along with broadcasting equipment. This capacity would be lessened for the Paralympics to 57,750 to add more handicap accessible seating. However, all events were held
behind closed doors due the
COVID-19 pandemic. The inauguration took place on 21 December 2019 with a special ceremony. The stadium's inaugural sporting event, the
2019 Emperor's Cup final, took place on 1 January 2020. In October 2021, the Government of Japan decided to change their plans and decide to keep the athletics track, scrapping the initial plan of removing it for an increased capacity for football and rugby matches, which was originally set in 2017. Additionally, it was announced that the stadium was bidding for hosting the
2025 World Athletics Championships. The 2025 Athletics Championship will be the first major spectator event for athletics at the stadium. As part of celebration of the 30th anniversary of
J. League, the stadium announced as venue for two games in May 2023. Home team
FC Tokyo won 2–1 against the 10-men
Kawasaki Frontale on 12 May.
Kashima Antlers faced
Nagoya Grampus two days later. After the operating rights to the stadium were franchised in April 2025, reports surfaced that financial group
MUFG is expected to acquire the naming rights of the National Stadium starting in 2026. == Concerts ==